153 research outputs found
Fragile detection of solar g modes by Fossat et al
The internal gravity modes of the Sun are notoriously difficult to detect,
and the claimed detection of gravity modes presented in Fossat et al. 2017 is
thus very exciting. Given the importance of these modes for understanding solar
structure and dynamics, the results must be robust. While Fossat et al. 2017
described their method and parameter choices in detail, the sensitivity of
their results to several parameters were not presented. Therefore, we test the
sensitivity to a selection of them. The most concerning result is that the
detection vanishes when we adjust the start time of the 16.5 year velocity time
series by a few hours. We conclude that this reported detection of gravity
modes is extremely fragile and should be treated with utmost caution.Comment: 15 pages, 11 Figure
Detection of Jovian seismic waves: a new probe of its interior structure
Knowledge of Jupiter's deep interior would provide unique constraints on the
formation of the Solar System. Measurement of its core mass and global
composition would shed light on whether the planet formed by accretion or by
direct gravitational collapse. At present, the inner structure of Jupiter is
poorly constrained and seismology, which consists of identifying acoustic
eigenmodes, offers a way to directly measure its deep sound speed profile, and
thus its physical properties. Seismology of Jupiter has been considered since
the mid 1970s, but hitherto the various attempts to detect global modes led, at
best, to ambiguous results. We report the detection of global modes of Jupiter,
based on radial velocity measurements performed with the SYMPA Fourier
spectro-imager. The global seismic parameters that we measure include the
frequency of maximum amplitude 1213+/-50 \mu Hz, the mean large frequency
spacing between radial harmonics 155.3+/-2.2 \mu Hz and the mode maximum
amplitude 49 (-10/+8) cm/s, all values that are consistent with current models
of Jupiter. This result opens the way to the investigation of the inner
structure of the Solar System's giant planets based on seismology techniques.Comment: Accepted in Astronomy & Astrophysics (8 pages, 9 figures
Venus wind map at cloud top level with the MTR/THEMIS visible spectrometer. I. Instrumental performance and first results
Solar light gets scattered at cloud top level in Venus' atmosphere, in the
visible range, which corresponds to the altitude of 67 km. We present Doppler
velocity measurements performed with the high resolution spectrometer MTR of
the Solar telescope THEMIS (Teide Observatory, Canary Island) on the sodium D2
solar line (5890 \AA). Observations lasted only 49 min because of cloudy
weather. However, we could assess the instrumental velocity sensitivity, 31 m/s
per pixel of 1 arcsec, and give a value of the amplitude of zonal wind at
equator at 151 +/- 16 m/s.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figure
The Comparative Exploration of the Ice Giant Planets with Twin Spacecraft: Unveiling the History of our Solar System
In the course of the selection of the scientific themes for the second and
third L-class missions of the Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 program of the European
Space Agency, the exploration of the ice giant planets Uranus and Neptune was
defined "a timely milestone, fully appropriate for an L class mission". Among
the proposed scientific themes, we presented the scientific case of exploring
both planets and their satellites in the framework of a single L-class mission
and proposed a mission scenario that could allow to achieve this result. In
this work we present an updated and more complete discussion of the scientific
rationale and of the mission concept for a comparative exploration of the ice
giant planets Uranus and Neptune and of their satellite systems with twin
spacecraft. The first goal of comparatively studying these two similar yet
extremely different systems is to shed new light on the ancient past of the
Solar System and on the processes that shaped its formation and evolution.
This, in turn, would reveal whether the Solar System and the very diverse
extrasolar systems discovered so far all share a common origin or if different
environments and mechanisms were responsible for their formation. A space
mission to the ice giants would also open up the possibility to use Uranus and
Neptune as templates in the study of one of the most abundant type of
extrasolar planets in the galaxy. Finally, such a mission would allow a
detailed study of the interplanetary and gravitational environments at a range
of distances from the Sun poorly covered by direct exploration, improving the
constraints on the fundamental theories of gravitation and on the behaviour of
the solar wind and the interplanetary magnetic field.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication on the special issue
"The outer Solar System X" of the journal Planetary and Space Science. This
article presents an updated and expanded discussion of the white paper "The
ODINUS Mission Concept" (arXiv:1402.2472) submitted in response to the ESA
call for ideas for the scientific themes of the future L2 and L3 space
mission
Surface magnetism of rapidly rotating red giants: single versus close binary stars
According to dynamo theory, stars with convective envelopes efficiently
generate surface magnetic fields, which manifest as magnetic activity in the
form of starspots, faculae, flares, when their rotation period is shorter than
their convective turnover time. Most red giants, having undergone significant
spin down while expanding, have slow rotation and no spots. However, based on a
sample of about 4500 red giants observed by the NASA Kepler mission, a previous
study showed that about 8 % display spots, including about 15 % that belong to
close binary systems. Here, we shed light on a puzzling fact: for rotation
periods less than 80 days, a red giant that belongs to a close binary system
displays a photometric modulation about an order of magnitude larger than that
of a single red giant with similar rotational period and physical properties.
We investigate whether binarity leads to larger magnetic fields when tides lock
systems, or if a different spot distribution on single versus close binary
stars can explain this fact. For this, we measure the chromospheric emission in
the CaII H & K lines of 3130 of the 4465 stars studied in a previous work
thanks to the LAMOST survey. We show that red giants in a close-binary
configuration with spin-orbit resonance display significantly larger
chromospheric emission than single stars, suggesting that tidal locking leads
to larger magnetic fields at a fixed rotational period. Beyond bringing
interesting new observables to study the evolution of binary systems, this
result could be used to distinguish single versus binary red giants in
automatic pipelines based on machine learning.Comment: 10 pages, 8 Figures, accepted for publication in A&
Red Giant Eclipsing Binaries: Exploring Non-Oscillators and Testing Asteroseismic Scalings
Thanks to advances in asteroseismology, red giants have become astrophysical laboratories for probing the Milky Way. Eclipsing binaries allow us to directly measure stellar properties independently of asteroseismology, which we use to investigate why some red giants don't oscillate and test asteroseismic scaling relations for those that do. By combining orbital solutions, high-resolution spectroscopy, and stellar evolution models for a subset of eight eclipsing red giants observed by Kepler, we find short-period binaries with strong tidal forces and systems with active red giants are less likely to exhibit solar-like oscillations. We also preview the results from Gaulme et al. 2016 (submitted). We find asteroseismic scalings overestimate red giant radii by about 6% on average and masses by about 16% in ten systems observed by Kepler. Systematic overestimation of mass leads to underestimation of stellar age, which has important implications for ensemble asteroseismology applied to galactic studies
Seismic constraints on rotation of Sun-like star and mass of exoplanet
Rotation is thought to drive cyclic magnetic activity in the Sun and Sun-like
stars. Stellar dynamos, however, are poorly understood owing to the scarcity of
observations of rotation and magnetic fields in stars. Here, inferences are
drawn on the internal rotation of a distant Sun-like star by studying its
global modes of oscillation. We report asteroseismic constraints imposed on the
rotation rate and the inclination of the spin axis of the Sun-like star HD
52265, a principal target observed by the CoRoT satellite that is known to host
a planetary companion. These seismic inferences are remarkably consistent with
an independent spectroscopic observation (rotational line broadening) and with
the observed rotation period of star spots. Furthermore, asteroseismology
constrains the mass of exoplanet HD 52265b. Under the standard assumption that
the stellar spin axis and the axis of the planetary orbit coincide, the minimum
spectroscopic mass of the planet can be converted into a true mass of 1.85
(+0.52,-0.42) M_Jupiter, which implies that it is a planet, not a brown dwarf.Comment: Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (5
pages, 5 figures, 3 tables). Available at
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.130329111
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